This is a blog related to CRM Archaeology and all that goes with it. I chronicle my experiences owning an archaeology firm, post news stories, and try to have educational material as often as possible.

Last night we rented “The Ledge”, a Matthew Chapman movie, from iTunes for $6.99. We rented it on our Apple TV 2, in HD, and streamed it on our TV. The movie premiered online as a streaming option on May 26. Weeks later it opened in a few theaters nationwide and is currently playing in a handful of venues. I’m not sure why the decision was made to open like that and I think it may have done the movie some harm. The only reason I knew about it was because of the tireless promotion by the movie’s writer and director, Matthew Chapman (great-great-grandson of Charles Darwin, yes, that Darwin). I heard Chapman discussing it on several podcasts including Skepticality, The Humanist Hour, and Point of Inquiry.

“A thriller in which a battle of philosophies between a fundamentalist Christian and an atheist escalates into a lethal battle of wills. Ultimately, as a test of faith, or lack of it, the believer forces the non-believer onto the ledge of a tall building. He then has one hour to make a choice between his own life and someone else’s. Without faith in an afterlife, will he be capable of such a sacrifice?”

I was prepared for a movie laden with dialogue and heavy, philosophical, monologues and I was not disappointed. That’s not to say the movie dragged on as some of that type tend to do. The conversations and thoughts of the lead characters were thought provoking and well written. Of course I identified with the atheist character, Gavin, played by Charlie Hunnam, and I felt that his passion and level of knowledge about the bible were a accurate portrayal of the modern, educated, atheist. I wouldn’t, however, characterize his behavior with Shana, played by Liv Tyler, as that of a typical atheist. The atheists I know are moral, kind, and intelligent people and his actions were immoral and dishonest. It makes a good movie, though.

The fundamentalist Christian antagonist (or protagonist, depending upon your point of view), Joe, played by Patrick Wilson, did a great job of portraying people of that sort. He showed how people of serious faith will do anything in support of their god’s mission and vision. At one point he said that he had no fear regarding the consequences of his actions because God was on his side. That is a scary thought and the central one of the film. In the end, Gavin has to decide whether he has the ability to die for his beliefs, or lack there of, to save another.

Since the central plot of the movie is very specific it is hard to discuss it without giving much away. I will say that the movie is worth watching and that you won’t be disappointed. The movie should appeal to the fundamentalist and atheist alike since both characters where written very well and honestly. Chapman, an atheist, did not write the fundamentalist as something that they are not. He was truthful and accurate.

You can rent the movie on iTunes or from Sundance.

Would you sacrifice your own life, knowing that there is no afterlife, for someone else? I’m not sure I can even make that decision without being presented with the situation directly. When religious people sacrifice their lives for their beliefs is it really that much of a sacrifice? In their own eyes, are they giving up that much? What is a few decades on this planet when you can have an eternity (ETERNITY!! FOREVER!!) in absolute paradise? If I thought for a second that god and heaven were real I would be searching for reason to blow myself up so I could get on with the rest of my eternal existence. Why not? What do you have to lose? Oh right, it might all be a fairy tale. That must be why most people balk at the whole martyr thing.